Apple Lays Off Hundreds As Car Project Comes to a Close

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Notoriously tight-lipped Apple never officially confirmed its autonomous car project, but the tech giant has been making an awful lot of moves for not having started work on one. Documents filed with California’s Employment and Development Department show that Apple recently laid off 600 employees in the state, coinciding with reports that it nixed its car project to focus on other products.


The company cited significant business challenges as the reason behind its layoffs. Earlier this year, reports surfaced that the company’s Special Projects Group would be disbanded because Apple couldn’t figure out production and how to integrate the car with its overall catalog of devices and services.


This all comes a decade after Apple car rumors started bubbling up, but the company was known to operate advanced and autonomous test vehicles in the San Francisco Bay Area. The project never really gained critical mass within the company, however, and the Special Projects Group underwent reorganizations and layoffs at least a few times over the years.


The car could have represented a significant opportunity for Apple, but the company has had plenty of external case studies from other new and legacy automakers that likely changed its mind. Affordability and manufacturing challenges abound for even the most experienced companies, as Ford and others have gingerly pulled back on the most aggressive investments and electrification plans. Autonomous vehicles are even more challenging, as GM’s Cruise has proved with much press over the last year.


[Image: TonyV3112 via Shutterstock]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Scott Scott on Apr 09, 2024

    Apple is a software company, Auto makers aren't. If Apple hasn't developed a solid core of a marketable system then they deserve to fail.


    Long term, Apple has to worry about the China market moving to local phones. That would change APPLE to apple overnight.

  • Cprescott Cprescott on Apr 09, 2024

    The Fruit company found out that people won't pay extra for the 4th wheel.

  • FreedMike I guess they didn't get invited to the ride and drive event.
  • NotMyCircusNotMyMonkeys still DDing a 2006 scion xA bought new. newly single later that year and ive managed to keep it that way :)dogs are awesome.
  • ToolGuy "I can't point you to a link to my Jalopnik review of the 2008 Sable Premier, because it never went live on the site due to disagreements with editors over how I'd structured the piece. 16½ years later, all I can recall is that I removed door panels to examine the build quality of hidden electrical connectors and window-regulator mounting hardware, and that I thought Ford had improved greatly in those departments since the 1990s."• This is a great paragraph. (I could support this style of automotive journalism.)
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Loony left strikes again.
  • Honda1 It's time to deal with these punk protestors/disruptors in a more "meaningful" way. Whether it be at Tesla in Germany or any one of the schools in the US, the time has come for these professional punks to be held accountable by any means. This shyt has to stop!
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